13-A November 27, 2012 CITY CLERK’S OFFICE - MEMORANDUM To: City Council From: Councilmember McKeown Date: November 27, 2012 13-A: Request of Councilmember McKeown that the Council direct staff to evaluate how best to divest fossil fuel investments from the City's portfolios, and return with policy options as part of the February mid-year budget review. 13-A November 27, 2012 Climate Activists Hit Hard With 'Do the Math' National Tour | The Nation 11/18/12 12:30 PM Walmart Strike Spreads to Texas; Organizers Promise Black Friday Protest Climate Activists Hit Hard With 'Do the Math' National Tour Tom Hayden November 13, 2012 Like 165 | Tweet 133 | | Recommended by 0 | Text Size A | A | A Email | Print | Share | Single Page | Web Letter (0) | Write a Letter | Take Action | Subscribe Now LOS ANGELES —Less than a week after the presidential election, a fired-up crowd of climate activists cheered Bill McKibben and the “Do the Math” roadshow at their UCLA stop. “Do the Math” is on a three-week caravan traveling by biodiesel-powered bus, with a stop in Washington, DC, to challenge the president to take quick action on the environment. The twenty-one-city tour promises to be a model for progressives committed to aggressively pushing Obama and Congress even About the Author before Obama’s second term formally begins in January. Tom Hayden One hundred chanting, marching students attended the UCLA Senator Tom Hayden, the Nation Institute's event from the Claremont Colleges, fifty miles away, to announce Carey McWilliams Fellow, has played an active role in American politics and... their campaign to seek a campus divestment from the “rogue” fossil fuel industry. Already this week Seattle’s mayor instructed his Also by the Author finance team to investigate how to divest city funds, and Maine’s Unity College announced its plan to divest. Remember and Thank George McGovern (Lived History) 350.org, the sponsoring organization for “Do the Math,” is calling on The Democrats and historians threw George colleges, religious institutions and public pension funds to make no McGovern under the bus. Now it is time for his new investments in fossil fuels, “wind down” current investments in resurrection, in a search for history’s lessons. five years. Divestment would lead fossil fuel providers to begin to curtail lobbying activities in Washington, DC, and prepare to Tom Hayden transition to a future as “energy companies.” The strategy is partly Remembering Russell Means (Lived modeled on the global campaign of divestment from South Africa, History) although the analogy is incomplete. South Africans were carrying Russell was a reminder that the wars against out a liberation war that could not be defeated, with powerful indigenous people, and the conquest of their African-American and clergy constituencies in America. Legislators resources, are far from over, and that we like Maxine Waters and Willie Brown carried divestment bills for cannot be fully human until remorse with our seven years before being signed in California, tipping the balance eyes wide open allows the possibility of against apartheid. Despite its efforts, 350 is not inclusive of black or reconciliation. Latino constituencies although is message is one of environmental justice. The UCLA event was overwhelmingly white on a campus Tom Hayden where a majority of undergraduates are non-white. How to explain 350’s scale? Just as a pointless war can spark a massive peace movement, the corporate- governmental attack on the sources of life itself causes an instinctive human response on behalf of the earth. The scale and energy of this movement goes far beyond the considerable organizational power of the well-funded and well-staffed national environmental groups. It rests on the collective legacy of many previous upsurges going back as far the millions who gathered at the first Earth Day, the vast anti-nuclear power movement and the Nuclear Freeze effort. It has something to do with the 51-year-old McKibben’s flexible, improvisational, gentle and grounded style of leadership. A longtime resident of Vermont, a graduate of Harvard and a lyrical nature writer, his personal authenticity contains echoes of Henry David Thoreau. He seems to know that he is a prophetic instrument of an emerging force much greater than himself. The 350.org plan to attack the fossil fuel companies fully complements the peace movement’s demand to end the Long War on Terrorism, which is also an energy resource war. 350.org, however, is a single-issue movement lacking a platform on wars and military spending. Rapid progress towards renewables, however, will solidify public support for avoiding energy wars in the Persian Gulf. The renewable resource that 350.org taps into is one of human protest energy rarely seen in recent years. In late 2010, for example, 350.org coordinated nearly 8,000 actions, most of them colorful and symbolic, across 188 countries. http://www.thenation.com/article/171225/climate-activists-hit-hard-do-math-national-tour# Page 1 of 7 Climate Activists Hit Hard With 'Do the Math' National Tour | The Nation 11/18/12 12:30 PM This article is brought to you by The Nation Builders. Find out more… The 350.org approach borrows in part from the “anti-globalization” and rainforest action movements’ focus over two decades on attacking corporate power directly, although this time at its core power rather than the reputation of its brand. Naomi Klein is a key supporter, and is featured in one of several videos employed in the caravan’s multi-media presentation. “If they are trying to take away our planet,” McKibben argues, “we simply have to try to take away their profits.” As he has in many writings, McKibben relies on environmental science to make an apocalyptic case. In order to keep rising climate heat below 2 degrees Celsius, he says, only 565 more gigatons of carbon dioxide emissions can be allowed; but the fossil fuel industry already has 2,795 gigatons of CO2 in its reserves. Therefore, he concludes the very “business model” of giants like Chevron, Exxon Mobil and BP must be changed before they overheat the planet by implementing their conventional model. If the “do the math” argument is too speculative for some, the 350 argument is bolstered powerfully by the rash of catastrophic weather events ranging from droughts to superstorms now slamming the continent with increasing force and regularity. Superstorm Sandy put Michael Bloomberg into Obama’s column, and New York governor Andrew Cuomo has vociferously attacked the climate-deniers. With California and New York becoming major supporters of energy efficiency and green infrastructure, any Obama energy or climate initiatives will begin with stronger support than four years ago. Even Obama’s former regulatory chief, Cass Sunstein, is writing about the economic benefits of environmental regulations compared to the status quo. Sunstein says the cost of the East Coast hurricane will be $50 billion and will reduce US economic growth by one-half percent. On the XL Pipeline project, Obama soon may face another round of civil disobedience like that which caused him to delay the approvals process last year. Van Jones, formerly Obama’s “green jobs” representative, who now endorses 350, says the pipeline was a “done deal” until the protesters circled the White House. Obama now faces competing pressures from two core constituencies on the pipeline, from building trades and environmentalists. A likely rerouting of the pipeline around the Nebraska Sand Hills and most of the Ogallala Aquifer could mitigate objections from Nebraskans, but the dangers of disastrous spills, escalating costs and polluting emissions will remain. Attempts by Transcanada to open an alternative route through British Colombia face enormous First Nation and environmental opposition. Hanging over the controversy is the chilling judgment of NASA’s leading climate scientist, James Hansen, that it’s “game over” for the climate if the pipeline is completed. Obama’s options seem to be: first, continuing to defer a final decision while monitoring the costs, risks and levels of opposition; second, meet with the 350.org protesters to hear their concerns directly; or make a dramatic counter-offer involving conservation, renewables and global leadership over the next four years, to be announced in his second Inaugural Address in January. While the environmental caravan demanding renewable resources rolls towards Washington, Obama and top US officials are scheduled to visit Cambodia, Thailand, Myanmar and Australia to shore up the American military presence in the navigation routes carrying oil and resources from Asia to the Persian Gulf. The so-called US geostrategic “pivot” towards Asia inevitably begins a new cold war with China over fossil fuels. Game over? Perhaps it’s sudden death overtime. As Al Gore described the terrible dilemma in Earth in The Balance (1992): “At this stage, the maximum that is politically feasible still falls short of the minimum that is truly effective.” Now’s the time to read Naomi Klein on whether Superstorm Sandy will push us to realign our relationship with the natural world: Superstorm Sandy: A People’s Shock? Tom Hayden November 13, 2012 Like 165 | Tweet 133 | | Recommended by 0 | Text Size A | A | A Email | Print | Share | Single Page | Web Letter (0) | Write a Letter | Take Action | Subscribe Now If you like this article, consider Reprint this article. Click here making a donation. for rights and information. PAID ADS http://www.thenation.com/article/171225/climate-activists-hit-hard-do-math-national-tour# Page 2 of 7 It's time for fossil fuel companies to do the right thing - latimes.com 11/18/12 12:23 PM Sign In or Sign Up Like 366k Membership Services Jobs Cars Real Estate Subscribe Rentals Weekly Circulars Custom Publishing Place Ad OPINION LOCAL U.S.
Details
-
File Typepdf
-
Upload Time-
-
Content LanguagesEnglish
-
Upload UserAnonymous/Not logged-in
-
File Pages6 Page
-
File Size-